Book Review – Prioritizing Web Usability

In the world of web usability, one name comes to mind above all others: Jakob Nielson. His recent book in conjunction with Hoa Loranger is titled Prioritizing Web Usability.

Jakob Nielson runs the website useit.com and holds a Ph.D. in user interface design/computer science from the Technical University of Denmark.

Amazon.com Description:
In 2000, Jakob Nielsen, the worldâ€™s leading expert on Web usability, published a book that changed how people think about the Webâ€”Designing Web Usability (New Riders). Many applauded. A few jeered. But everyone listened. The best-selling usability guru is back and has revisited his classic guide, joined forces with Web usability consultant Hoa Loranger, and created an updated companion book that covers the essential changes to the Web and usability today. Prioritizing Web Usability is the guide for anyone who wants to take their Web site(s) to next level and make usability a priority! Through the authorsâ€™ wisdom, experience, and hundreds of real-world user tests and contemporary Web site critiques, youâ€™ll learn about site design, user experience and usability testing, navigation and search capabilities, old guidelines and prioritizing usability issues, page design and layout, content design, and more!

Prioritizing Web Usability, is easy to follow and can help website owners to improve the usability of just about any site in existence. Although it is a book, it works as a guide giving specific examples of what works and what doesn’t. You never have to read from front to back to get useful information. It is interesting enough that it would be easy to read from front to back, but it is easy to use the book only on the specific areas of your website that you want to work on.

This book is an excellent compliment to Jakob’s earlier book, Designing Web Usability, which is also a must read for anyone involved in web design, SEO, online marketing and other related fields.

While this book is very thorough and detailed about usability on a site level, it goes beyond simple usability on a website. Topics such as optimizing and pricing pay per click ads, ad placement click rates, actual reasons to improve a website, writing content, detecting and using specific information such as user connection speed, and hundreds of other topics.

Everything topic in the book is thoroughly explained, and backed with specific examples and statistics where appropriate. Overall, this could be the only resource a savvy website owner needs to make their website very usable.

How to apply this book to your website:
Starting from the area that plays a top three role in importance on most websites, formatting submission forms on your website. The books explains exactly how your forms should look and be formatted, so that they are easy to use and well understood.

Next moving to the actual products that you sell, you can see specific examples of the best way to lay out categories and individual products on your site. You will learn how to write good product descriptions, and while you are writing content, Jakob tells you how to write good content for the rest of your site.

Now, you can clean up your global navigation, and optimize your search function on your website.

After standardizing your links, and making your text more readable, you can get rid of that extra flash that you really don’t need, as well as those pop-up windows that really don’t do anything for you.

Finally, after checking through the usability killers that Jakob outlines, you have a usable, cleanly formatted and professional website. You can now go out and focus on your marketing and driving traffic to your site, knowing that if you don’t have any sales, it’s not the fault of your website’s usability.

A Personal Note:
What I really like about Jakob’s beliefs and standards is that he bashes the heavy use of graphics and media that is commonly seen on websites. While I often take criticism from people by following his advice and not using a lot of images in the layout of my sites, the results truly speak for themselves.

Thank you. It is refreshing to read someone who understands the web presence. Essentially people go online in search on one primary item – information. All of the pretty ‘eye candy’ in the world will not add true value to your site or give satisfaction to your visitors. It has long been taught that good, clean presentation will win out in the end, whether it be for sites selling product or presenting ideas.
I think sites can be very pleasing to their visitors without looking like the lates “Neon display from Vegas”.
Thank you again for strengthening a thought of tru value.

Summer Jones22 Jun, 2007

The book The Floods Neighbours is a totally awsome book u should read it

This really is a useful book to learn about effective website design strategies. So many people got their web design all wrong that it’s hardly usable. Simply adding gee-whiz gadgets normally won’t impress users, just irritate them.

Jakob Neilson’s launching a new web usability book called Eyetracking Web Usability this 23rd October 2007. Check it out at Amazon.

I personally read the book that Jakob Nielsen wrote. It was very interesting and very well put. I recommend the book to anyone. I am now working for a shopping cart software company called BlingCart.com